Throughout the next 10 days, we'll be unveiling our list of the 10 under-the-radar Giants who will make some noise once training camp begins. While the team made plenty of headlines during free agency, their roster is still shallow in spots, and they'll need these unheralded players to have a productive training camp to put them at ease.

Today, we take a look at safety Nat Berhe, the Giants' fifth-round draft pick from 2014. The versatile safety played in the "Aztec" at San Diego State, which allowed him to be all parts linebacker, strong safety and free safety. Like so many of the Giants' draft picks this year, he was a team captain.

Why the Giants like him: Look no further than Derek Carr's game-by-game statistics last season at Fresno State. The Raiders' second-round pick finished last season with 5,082 yards and 50 touchdowns, but had one game in particular that stood out for the wrong reasons. His season-low in completion percentage (61.4), QB rating (116.9) yards (298, he threw for less against Cal Poly, but we'll discard that game because Fresno State wasn't firing on all cylinders) came against the Aztecs because of Berhe's ability to disguise the defense. Reading a safety is much more difficult when a versatile athlete is lining up in the slot on one play and blitzing off the edge on the next. Check out how many different spots he comes from here:

Why we like him: When I first saw his highlight tape and spoke to a few scouts, I immediately thought of Will Hill. On the field Berhe is fearless and isn't afraid to freestyle. He's comfortable in a complex defense and doesn't let small mistakes turn into much bigger ones. His ability to fire out of a backpedal is pretty rare, and his power is intimidating. Some scouts had a third-round grade on him, and it's easy to see why. Though the Giants might want Berhe to ripen for a season behind Quintin Demps look for Berhe to be a special teams star this year. He's my early choice to lead the team in special teams tackles out of the gate.